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British Prime Minister Keir Starmer gives a media statement at Downing Street in London, Britain, April 30, 2026. REUTERS

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said the government could ban pro-Palestinian marches in some circumstances because of the “cumulative effect” the demonstrations had ​on the Jewish community after two Jewish men were stabbed in ‌London on Wednesday.

Starmer told the BBC that he would always defend freedom of expression and peaceful protest, but chants like “Globalise the Intifada” during demonstrations were “completely off limits” and those ​voicing them should be prosecuted.

Pro-Palestinian marches have become a regular feature ​in London since the October 2023 attack by Hamas on ⁠Israel that triggered the Gaza war. Critics say the demonstrations have generated ​hostility and become a focus for antisemitism.

Protesters have argued they are exercising ​their democratic right to spotlight ongoing human rights and political issues related to the situation in Gaza.

Starmer said he was not denying there were “very strong legitimate views about the ​Middle East, about Gaza”, but many people in the Jewish community had ​told him they were concerned about the repeat nature of the marches.

Read More: War with US will ‘likely’ resume: Iranian armed forces

Asked if the tougher ‌response ⁠should focus on chants and banners, or whether the protests should be stopped altogether, Starmer said: “I think certainly the first, and I think there are instances for the latter.”

“I think it’s time to look across the board ​at protests and the ​cumulative effect,” he ⁠said, adding that the government needed to look at what further powers it could take.

Britain raised its terrorism ​threat level to “severe” on Thursday amid mounting security concerns that ​foreign states ⁠were helping fuel violence, including against the Jewish community.

“We are seeing an elevated threat to Jewish and Israeli individuals and institutions in the UK,” the ⁠head of ​counter-terrorism policing, Laurence Taylor, said in a ​statement, adding that police were also working “against an unpredictable global situation that has consequences closer to ​home, including physical threats by state-linked actors.”



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